Deficiency of huntingtin has pleiotropic effects in the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum.

PLoS Genet

Molecular Neurogenetics Unit, Center for Human Genetic Research, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.

Published: April 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The huntingtin protein is linked to Huntington's disease through a polyglutamine expansion that disrupts its normal function, leading to neuronal loss, but its exact role is still unclear.
  • - Researchers created a mutant strain of the related protein (hd) in the model organism Dictyostelium discoideum to investigate huntingtin's biological functions, finding that its absence caused developmental and cellular issues despite the organism remaining viable.
  • - The deficiency in huntingtin resulted in poor cell aggregation and sensitivity to environmental stress, with some developmental processes able to be partially rescued by specific cations, highlighting the complexity of its physiological roles.

Article Abstract

Huntingtin is a large HEAT repeat protein first identified in humans, where a polyglutamine tract expansion near the amino terminus causes a gain-of-function mechanism that leads to selective neuronal loss in Huntington's disease (HD). Genetic evidence in humans and knock-in mouse models suggests that this gain-of-function involves an increase or deregulation of some aspect of huntingtin's normal function(s), which remains poorly understood. As huntingtin shows evolutionary conservation, a powerful approach to discovering its normal biochemical role(s) is to study the effects caused by its deficiency in a model organism with a short life-cycle that comprises both cellular and multicellular developmental stages. To facilitate studies aimed at detailed knowledge of huntingtin's normal function(s), we generated a null mutant of hd, the HD ortholog in Dictyostelium discoideum. Dictyostelium cells lacking endogenous huntingtin were viable but during development did not exhibit the typical polarized morphology of Dictyostelium cells, streamed poorly to form aggregates by accretion rather than chemotaxis, showed disorganized F-actin staining, exhibited extreme sensitivity to hypoosmotic stress, and failed to form EDTA-resistant cell-cell contacts. Surprisingly, chemotactic streaming could be rescued in the presence of the bivalent cations Ca(2+) or Mg(2+) but not pulses of cAMP. Although hd(-) cells completed development, it was delayed and proceeded asynchronously, producing small fruiting bodies with round, defective spores that germinated spontaneously within a glassy sorus. When developed as chimeras with wild-type cells, hd(-) cells failed to populate the pre-spore region of the slug. In Dictyostelium, huntingtin deficiency is compatible with survival of the organism but renders cells sensitive to low osmolarity, which produces pleiotropic cell autonomous defects that affect cAMP signaling and as a consequence development. Thus, Dictyostelium provides a novel haploid organism model for genetic, cell biological, and biochemical studies to delineate the functions of the HD protein.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3084204PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002052DOI Listing

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